"his manner of speaking is not after the mannerof men generally" --Toledo Blade

Mark Twain's Voice

Most of the newspaper reporters who covered MT's live performances commented on his
"inimitable" or "unmistakable" voice. Early in his career a very few thought it was distracting, but
the rest found it an irresistible and vital part of the humorous spell that he cast over his audiences.
Reviewers usually referred to it as a "drawl," and emphasized the slowness of MT's delivery.
According to one (who had his own flair for tall tales) he spoke at the rate of three words a
minute.

Sam Clemens may have been embarrassed about his way of talking. To torment the
autobiographical narrator of "Facts Concerning the Recent Carnival of Crime in Connecticut," for
example, Conscience speaks to him in "an exasperating drawl" -- "there is nothing I am quite so
sensitive about," admits that narrator, "as a mocking imitation of my drawling infirmity of
speech." As Mark Twain the humorist, however, Clemens could use that voice, even
exaggerating its "infirmities," to keep audiences in a receptive mood.

I wish we could hear it. In the 1860s all we would have needed was 25 or 35 cents (with no
extra charge for reserved seats) to listen to one of MT's lectures. Even in the mid-1890s, it would
only have taken 75 cents or a dollar. To MT himself, the relationship between a live speech and
the written transcript of it was about the same as the relationship between a live person and a
corpse. But thanks to the help of several of the modern performers who've perfected careful and loving imitations of it, you can at least
get some good ideas about what MT's voice sounded like.

The sound files below are available in two formats, .wav (the black and white icons below), and .mp3 (the red and white icons).

First, the work of McAvoy Layne, who has performed "Mark Twain" in almost as many places around the world as Sam Clemens did, and was featured as MT on A&E's Biography, and the Discovery Channel's documentary on Adventures of Huckleberry Finn.

The Truth about My Birth in Florida, Missouri (1.3 MB | 314K)

The Carson River & the Mississippi (1.4 MB | 314K)

Humor and Preaching (1.7 MB | 256K)

[Copyright 1995, McAvoy Layne, used by permission;
Audio Editions produces two of McAvoy Layne's performances as MT:
Wild Humorist of the Pacific Slope and Letters From the Earth.]

Second, a couple samples of MT's voice as recreated by Richard Henzel, a Chicago-based actor who has impersonated Twain over a thousand times in scores of sites in the United States, Canada and Great Britain since the mid-1960s: